Unique constraint with JPA and Bean Validation
I'd like to have a @Unique
constraint with Bean Validation, but that is not provided by the standard. If I would use JPA's @UniqueConstraint
I wouldn't have a unique validation and error reporting mechanism.
Is there a way to define @Unique
as a Bean Validation constraint and combine it with JPA, such that JPA creates a column with an unique constraint and checks wheter a value is unique or not?
Solution 1:
Unless you acquire a lock on a whole table, it is basically not possible to check for unicity using a SQL query (any concurrent transaction could modify data after a manual check but before the commit of the ongoing transaction). In other words, it isn't possible to implement a valid unique verification at the Java level and thus to provide a validation implementation. The only reliable way to check for unicity is while committing the transaction.
The BV spec summarizes it like this:
Appendix D. Java Persistence 2.0 integration
Question: should we add @Unique that would map to @Column(unique=true)?
@Unique cannot be tested at the Java level reliably but could generate a database unique constraint generation. @Unique is not part of the BV spec today.
So while I agree that it would be nice to have unique (and non null) constraint violations wrapped in a Bean Validation exception, this is currently not the case.
References
- Bean Validation specification (JSR 303)
- Appendix D. Java Persistence 2.0 integration
- Question about validation and persistence constraints
Solution 2:
More information on how to implement a @Unique and the problematic around it can be found here - http://community.jboss.org/wiki/AccessingtheHibernateSessionwithinaConstraintValidator
Solution 3:
Well you CAN do it, but it's not trivial. The problem is: the validator requires database access to perform some queries to check, if the value you want to insert is already there or not. And this can't be really done from the validator, as it doesn't have access to the sessionFactory/session. Of course you could instantiate it (session/sessionFactory) inside the validator, but it's not a good coding practice.
Solution 4:
You can make a validator read the JPA annotations and apply it. Here is somewhat of an example using spring validators that can be used as an idea to expand on.
JPA JSR303 Spring Form Validation
You can also inject (@Inject
or Spring's @Autowired
) your session bean in a custom validator and the container should know how to wire it up. I only know this as a Spring example:
import javax.validation.ConstraintValidator;
public class MyConstraintValidator implements ConstraintValidator {
@Autowired //@Inject
private Foo aDependency;
...
}